From Anonymous: "Misys is close to announcing an acquisition."
If you'd like to whisper it to me, I'm
here. In fact, I'll send you an HIStalk Yearbook 2005 if you tip
me off before the whole world knows. Readers have helped me scoop everyone else
a few times lately and I like it.
From Anonymous:
"Re: Hummel. The bizjournal article said he left to get more balance in his life.
Hmm CIO to consultant. Balance. Hmm, unless consulting has changed
radically overnight something is wrong with this equation. Sounds
like a mutual separation."
From ClinApps: "HIStalk
makes the Cerner
board. Apparently you've gained a reputation." The subject
of the message was HIStalk: "Cerner just takes a relentless beating on that widely-read board. It's
all about Meditech and Epic there. I think the trash-talk is beginning
to have an effect on the CIO view of Cerner (along with McKesson and a
few others)."
Well, I have several immediate reactions. First, I'm happy for the publicity
and I'm preening proudly at being called widely read, although I can't imagine
having much influence on CIOs. However, I take exception to the suggestion that
I trash-talk Cerner. Much of what might be perceived as Cerner bashing here
is actually my quoting of someone else, like HIStalk readers or stock message
board posters. I'd also define bashing as knowingly saying something that isn't
true, which I defy anyone to find examples of here (recall that I was just about the only
person defending
Cerner in their Children's Pittsburgh PR nightmare, which happens to be
the #1 most-read HIStalk article ever.) Maybe the message refers to the HISsies
voting since I rarely mention Epic or MEDITECH otherwise. All those nominations
and voting are from HIStalk readers, not from me. If Cerner comes out winning
in some unflattering categories, it's either because that's how HIStalk readers
feel or other vendors did a better job than Cerner did in mobilizing folks to
vote the party ticket.
Speaking of the HISsies, they're winding down.
Turnout has been good. Anyone who hasn't voted should do
so immediately. If not, you'll be kicking yourself when I grandly announce
the winners in a few days.
CIO Field Report
This
must have spoiled New Year's Eve. An employee of the home health division of
Seattle's Providence Health Systems took unencrypted computer backups home per
department policy to prevent loss from disaster. Now the health system has an
even bigger disaster as the tapes were
stolen
from the employee's car on December 31, exposing the PHI and identity data of
365,000 patients.
Orange County, California decides to cough
up
$1.6 million to pay off Cerner for a billing system that ran years late. "Supervisor Chris Norby noted that
the county may be paying twice for the same service, which was supposed
to be paid in full years ago under a fixed-price agreement. Yet because
the agreement has been kept secret – with the company arguing that a
public release could jeopardize its trade secrets – there’s no way to
tell whether Norby is correct."
Triad
Hospitals will
outsource
IT operation of its 49 hospitals to Perot Systems in a ten-year, $1.2 billion
deal. McKesson was also a winner, as it bags a separate $120 million contract
for a complete Horizon Clinicals rollout to Triad hospitals.
Speaking
of McKesson, earnings
just came out: EPS of $0.61 vs. -$2.26 a year ago and beating consensus of $0.52.
They also raised guidance.
Fort Wayne-based medical office software vendor
Medical
Informatics Engineering
is being
investigated
by the FBI, apparently for hacking the software of new cross-town competitor
triPRACTIX.
Thanks to TiredCIO for the tip.
Cleveland's University Hospitals and
Health Systems says they'll implement
Eclipsys Sunrise clinicals, including their new pharmacy system. That's not
quite as strong as having a signed contract in hand, but notice that it is earnings
season and good news seems to be hoarded and spun for just that purpose by every
publicly traded vendor. UHHS is a TDS customer, as is often the case in a Sunrise
sale.
Misys reports profits that are down
20%
for the first half of the year. The company will streamline its banking operations
and divest some minor business units. As usual, healthcare wasn't an important
enough part of their portfolio to warrant a mention, not necessarily a bad thing
given the company's uninspiring performance.
Interesting timing:
New York's Lenox Hill Hospital signs
up
for A4's Healthmatics ED and Canopy Care Management.
Imaging vendor Emageon
announces
a year-end booking backlog of $158 million.
Longtime healthcare
IT guy Jim Bradley joins
the board
of claims processor GTESS. You may remember him from United HealthCare, iMcKesson,
or Abaton.com. Boy, that iMcKesson idea seems hopelessly lame and fad-driven,
doesn't it? I remember them trying to explain (usually unsuccessfully) just
what it was and why anyone should care. On the other hand, I glazed over when
it came up so I probably just missed its wonderfulness.
Insider Mark
Vachon is the new
CEO
of GE Healthcare Technologies in Waukesha. Would Waukesha be a city whose state
I don't even need to mention if GE weren't in town?
A panel of medical
bigwigs is
urging
the profession to replace largely ignored voluntary standards for dealing with
drug companies with stricter guidelines limiting acceptance of meals, phony
consulting jobs, entertainment, and cash, on which drug companies spend $13
billion a year. The JAMA article mentions the omission of negative study data
by scientists who are on the take from drug companies, probably not mentioning
Cleveland Clinic by name even though they're a poster child for stepping well
over even a generously placed line.
Here's an update
on Midlands Memorial's implementation of Medsphere's OpenVista EHR, going live
on the first units in a month. Like all hospitals, they couldn't resist giving
it a dopey name based on a awkwardly contrived acronym, in their case calling
it EDITH. They probably had a contest, although if EDITH was the winner, they
must have had some real gems submitted.
Wyoming's 99-bed Ivinson Memorial
Hospital wants to get into the ASP
business,
hosting systems for tiny hospitals. The hospital expects to make millions and
create high-paying jobs, which hardly ever happens when that's the primary motivation
and even more rarely when a non-profit hospital tries to remake itself as a
lean, mean, business machine. Good luck to them anyway. I like rooting for small
hospitals.
Rich Tarrant eats
his 35th campaign spaghetti dinner and says he wants to eliminated Medicaid
in favor of an expanded Medicare. He mentioned how much business IDX got due
to ever-changing Medicaid regulations. He also said that health problems made
him decide to retire
from IDX in 2002, but he came back when he felt better.
Gartner questions
Oracle's security.
From the stock message boards:
Cerner
"HIStalk.
Cerner just takes a relentless beating on that widely-read board. It's
all about Meditech and Epic there. I think the trash-talk is beginning
to have an effect on the CIO view of Cerner (along with McKesson and a
few others)."
"Not neccessarily. Histalk is not a cheerleading stage for Epic and
Meditech. Though I do have to say in talking to those that have been
around the implenentation and support of these products tend to be very
positive. I can't say the same thing about Cerner at times. Anyway,
here are the nominations for the "2006 Hissues" that mention Cerner:
smartest vendor strategic move, most impressive vendor sales deal, worst healthcare IT vendor,
most impressive vendor at the HIMSS Annual Conference 2005, HIS industry figure in whose face you’d most like to throw a pie.
The
pie throwing is obvious as Neal tends to be on the arrogant side. Other
than that, I see folks that have been pretty positive about Cerner. I will also say this, despite the so-called negative feed-back and perceptions from CIO, I will say this:
1. Impact is lesser than you think. I haven't seen Cerner slow down. 2.
Has Cerner done productive steps to correct the perception of hard and
lengthy implementaiotns and less than stellar support? 3. Do you need an "Up with Cerner" website or blogger to make you feel better about Cerner? Any volunteers for number three?"
Emdeon
"The blame game and deal making has started. Notice the article quotes
the Feds as saying the investigation is ongoing. More heads will roll
before this is over. Who will be first to want to cut a deal, Kang or Singer?"
"Former WebMD exec pleads guilty to conspiracy.
A former executive
with a unit of what was once WebMD Corp., now Emdeon Corp., pleaded
guilty to tax evasion and conspiring to inflate the company's earnings
from 1997 to 2001. The defendant, Henry Holbrook, 51, helped create
Medical Manager and served as one of its vice presidents during the
period. Prosecutors said Holbrook had companies acquired by Medical
Manager pay kickbacks to himself and others. Holbrook and other senior
managers also inflated quarterly revenue in order to beat analysts'
expectations and boost the market price of Medical Manager and WebMD
stock, prosecutors said. Holbrook could face up to five years in prison
on both the conspiracy count and the tax evasion charge. Last month 10
other former executives of Medical Manager were indicted on conspiracy
and money-laundering charges. -- by the Associated Press."
LanVision
"New high, decent volume and no news. Someone knows something."
"LANV is presenting to a big group of analysts today in New York....looks like they like what they're hearing...."
I wasn't surprised by the announcement that UHHS Cleveland selected
Eclipsys because their Soarian financials install has gone nowhere (even
though they are only replacing an old, homegrown billing system). The
Eclipsys clinicals selection is a big defeat for Siemens.
Regarding John Hummel. I have met both Pat Fry (New Sutter CEO) and Van
Johnson (old Sutter CEO). I think John is making the right choice.
Any fan of Les Paul - Rock and Roll Hall of Famer, five-time Grammy Award
winner, pioneer of the electric guitar and inventor of numerous recording
techniques, such as reverb and multi-track recording - was born June 9,
1915 in Waukesha Wisconsin. Forget GE - there are more important things in
life!
Anonymous: